Does anyone have a good layout for using trello in Web Project / Design management?

I've got a team spread over the world and would like to switch from Basecamp (I think) to something like Trello (easier, cheaper, obviously).

Watching the video gave me some ideas, but I'm still scratching my head about the best way to begin. In order for my team to embrace this, it'll have to be almost perfect from the beginning, so I don't want to mess up :)

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Nathan, I'm interested in this scheme too... Maybe we both can come up with something. If you have any idea, please post it here! Thanks and good luck!
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DenisNov 24 '11 at 0:42

@Denis if you are interested in this you can vote up by clicking the up arrow (when you have enough reputation). Please do not use the answer link to reply to someone. With a bit more reputation you can leave comments.
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phwd♦Nov 24 '11 at 0:48

@phwd Trello is "missing" chat -- but that's not such thing to me, unless I'm missing something? I do wish there were a way to thread conversations, though I know that might impact the simplicity of Trello (which is a "feature").
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NathanDec 9 '11 at 6:18

That's pretty great. I've tried to keep everything in one organization, but I'm finding that one or two cards sometimes isn't really enough for some projects. For larger projects, I may consider going to a separate organization. Do you have concerns about your clients reading the comment threads? Some of our conversations are either pretty mundane or reveal our uncertainty about customer expectations, feasibility, etc...
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NathanDec 9 '11 at 6:14

We use proper language in Trello and I don't have any concerns about clients reading our comments. Even if these comment are mundane. Our clients are humans too. :) When I want to say something private I use Skype or phone. This is very rare. We have nothing to hide from our customers. This way of communication is good for healthy relationships and customer expectations. This help me to involve a client into the development process.
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Roman ZolotarevDec 10 '11 at 7:18

Think about the path your web projects take. Usually it starts as an idea, goes to a plan, maybe goes into development or further planning, moves into testing, QA, rc, etc. Then finally it's goes from development to live. Of course, this is just an example.